... Who became a tragic stereotype.
You've never heard of him. Not unless you are seriously into Texas history. And Black history at that. He was of the first generation of Black freedmen in our country. He had an education and the gift of public speaking and was among of the first African Americans to rise within the Republican Party and be elected to public office, and then the White junta stone-walled his momentum and his legacy like an embarrassing criminal record. Norris Wright Cuney was one of the first of many largely forgotten Black forefathers; men and women who suffered all kinds of oppression, yet achieved the highest stations in what I call “Black Exceptionalism.”
And don't laugh at that term. I can show you plenty of places, cities right here in Texas where the most extraordinary people in the community were Black. In fact I am about to. And history and popular culture today supports that fact. But due to the racism in the past we have never heard of many of these individuals. Sadly it seems, our lack of knowledge about Black Exceptionalism is a persistent hold-over from our past, and one we cannot shake, whether we are Black or White or like Norris Cuney, somewhere in between.
The mulatto son of Texas Senator Phillip Cuney and his negro slave, Miss Adeline Stuart, Norris Wright Cuney was born into a mixed-race plantation family 1846 in Hempstead, Texas. He was freed in 1859 when still a teenager, and sent by his wealthy father to Pittsburgh to be educated. Afterwards he relocated to the coast where he started and managed his own stevedore business. Eventually Cuney would be appointed to the highest ranking position of any African American in the South during the late 19th century.
During the war, Norris had worked on steamships which serviced up and down the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers, giving him invaluable experience. Right after the Civil War, he went to Galveston where he got involved in the Union League, a somewhat clandestine government-funded organization designed to establish Civil Rights for the newly freed slaves. Cuney was soon considered one of the most important Black leaders in Texas, and his activities were closely reported by the New York Times, giving him national prominance. In 1870, Cuney served as the first sergeant of arms of the Reconstruction Legislature in Texas, where he became friends with Governor Edmund Davis. A fierce post-Civil War politician, he was elected to Galveston alderman and Republican Party Chairman, was a Mason and labor union leader, and in 1872 was appointed as a Federal Customs Collections agent, while his excellent education landed him as a member of the Galveston County School Board, which was beginning the first racially integrated schools in Texas, some one hundred years before this became the law of the land.
Norris Cuney's Republican leadership in Texas lasted almost twenty years, and is known by historians as the “Cuney Era.” Still, after a number of attempts, he was never able to get elected to either the Texas State Legislature or the Texas Senate. Then in 1882 as federal troops vacated the state at the end of “Reconstruction,” Cuney's days of influence were numbered. He was elected to Galveston alderman in 1883, but he and his fellow Black politicians were finally brought down by the manipulations of White Democrats, a conspiracy he dubbed the “Lilly White” movement, which joined forces with President Grover Cleveland and finally removed him and other Blacks from statewide involvement or influence in the Republican Party. This was the beginning of the “Jim Crow” era, or the regression of Negro Civil Rights enforced by Democratic leaders all over the United States. Never the less, in 1889 he was appointed to be U. S. Collector of Customs, the highest ranking appointment for any person of color before the turn of the century.
Nobody can blame Norris Wright Cuney for trying to hide or disappear. But his importance to Texas history was so obliterated that his and his wife's 16 inch by 20 inch portraits could hang in an antique shop in Belton, Texas for years without ever being recognized. That's where I entered the picture, pardon the pun.